Researchers were able to ascertain the colors people were seeing by looking at their brain activity. The study reveals we have unique brain activity associated with specific colors.
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While only 1 in 25 people has synesthesia, a new study reports intuitions about 'sound colors' are shared by a greater percentage of people. Sound color perception is mainly driven by the vowels in language.
Findings upend the long-standing belief that blind people lack deep knowledge of visual phenomena.
The evolution of red color vision in a species of butterfly is linked to coordinating rhodopsin tuning.
Researchers question if our brains can take in three primary color inputs and turn them into the range of different colors we can see, could a little bit more mental work result in us unlocking different hues?
Researchers answer the age-old question of why people perceive the same color in different ways?
According to a new study, feeling sad can lead to changes in our color perception.
A new study reports the photoreceptors in our eyes allow us to detect socially significant color variations better than other types of color vision.
According to researchers, the 'fill in' effect makes only a small contribution to how we perceive colors in an image. The study also provides new evidence that color processing cells play a vital role in color perception.
X-Rite Capsure, an archaeological tool to help researchers match colors, is not as consistent or accurate as the human eye in color determination.
Based on the study of a stroke patient with damage to the occipito-temporal brain region, researchers made a big discovery about color categorization. They reveal color categorization and naming can be independent in the human brain. The finding challenges long-standing theories of the mandatory involvement of language in adult human cognition and color discrimination.
Due to differences in visual systems, not all animals see the world in the same way.